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3 Random Tidbits

Worldviews.

3 random tidbits in about 5 minutes.

1.

A Worldviews Story.

From History:
Good Intent vs Good Results

30 Phil, Chapter 18, Peter Abelard, Touchstone 44: Intent.

The concept of intent has deep roots. Aristotle, in his Nicomachean Ethics, argued that voluntary actions guided by intention were essential for moral responsibility and virtue. Similarly, Roman law incorporated the concept of “mens rea,” a guilty mind, as a vital element in determining guilt. In 30 Philosophers, intent is explored using a “good intent-good result” device.

 


That Worldviews Story, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.

 

2.

A Worldviews FAQ.

Subject: Philosophy of Religion.

First, this came about from the following Facebook comment:

“It is philosophically convenient to say ‘religion should be a science,’ whereas it is arrogant for a philosopher to explicitly say ‘religion is not a science.’ Even physics was not a science in the beginning; it was a ridiculous heap of nonsense filled with blind hypotheses and theories. Why should modern philosophers not allow religion followers to transform their blind faith into a science for philosophers to fathom?”

Answer: Religion, whether you know it or not, is a part of everyone’s worldview, a part of each person’s belief system. However, the claim that physics started not as a science is a misunderstanding. It’s true that all ideas start as speculative…all of them. They then go through a judgment period and are either validated, disproven, or classified as unknowable. The difference between physics and religion is that physics operates within the scientific realm, where speculative ideas are rigorously tested and either validated or discarded. Religion, on the other hand, resides in the realm of belief. In addition to framing our empirical world, it attempts to provide answers for the unknown and unknowable. While religion and other beliefs not based on observation rely on faith, science depends on evidence and experimentation.

A religion can contain empirical claims, rational arguments, moral systems, rituals, myths, history, metaphysics, and personal meaning. That is why religion can overlap with science at times, especially when it makes claims about the material world. But overlap is not identity. When a religious claim becomes testable, science can examine it. When it remains about meaning, faith, ultimate purpose, or the unknowable, it belongs to belief and worldview rather than science.

 


That Worldviews FAQ, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.

 

3.

A Worldviews Story.

From History:
circa 8000 BCE
Americas Agrarian Society

Earliest known agrarian society in the Americas zone: In Oaxaca, Mexico, the site of Guilá Naquitz provides evidence of early plant domestication, particularly of squash, around 8000 BCE, with subsequent developments including maize and beans.

Imagined Image: An early agrarian society of Oaxaca, Mexico, circa 7900 BCE. It showcases small, temporary shelters, with indigenous people engaged in early farming practices.

Big History Thresholds: 1=Big Bang | 2=Stars&Galaxies | 3=Chemicals | 4=Solar System | 5=First Life | 6=TI | 7=Agrarian | 8=Science

Agriculture: The 7th threshold is agrarian societies which allowed for complex structured urban cities.

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That Worldviews Story, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.

 

The end. Refresh for another set.

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